tombranton wrote:I want to start working on the instrument rating and presently fly a 8GCBC Scout. Its equipped for instrument flight (Garmin 430, gyros, heated pitot, etc.) but I am not sure about the practical side of giving or receiving instrument training in a tandem aircraft. Anyone had an experience with this? I may have to find a more conventional aircraft in which to train.
I have not done instrument training in tandem. However, I am current and practice every 4-6 weeks with a CFII, still trying to get back to where I was 15 years ago before an extended period of inactivity. In the last 6 months I've come up from "not dangerous" to "acceptable minus".
I believe the CFII must be able to easily see all the instruments at the same time. Once your IFR skills come up to "not dangerous", his job is to catch trends, tell you how to do it better, see what you missed, be on you about precision, etc. If he can do all of that from the back, then it is fine. If not, I would do at least some of it in a 2-wide airplane -- but make sure that plane has a Garmin 430 like yours.
However, assuming you will be flying the Scout IFR, you should definitely do substantial amounts of the work in it as well. Nothing substitutes for knowing the aircraft so well you don't have to think about which button to push and really knowing the airspeeds and power settings for every situation.